Re: D.O. VS. CRNA
Assuming that your ultimate goal is to do anesthesia then:
1. If you are already an RN then it is a lot quicker to get your CRNA then it is to back and get all your prereqs for medical school and then go through medical school and residency. It would take approximately 2-3yrs to get ready to apply nurse anesthesia school if you were able to get into ICU right away, and even quicker if you were already working in ICU. Becoming an anesthesiologist on the other hand would take most nurses two years of prereqs/taking MCAT, another yr of applying/waiting to goto medical school, 4yrs of medical school, and then 4yrs+ of residency training.
2. Just because you goto medical school does not mean that you will get into an anesthesia residency. Anesthesia residency training is one of the more competitive residencies for physicians to get into.
3. Being a CRNA pays on average about 140-150K a year. That is as much or more than most primary care physicians make. I am not saying it is right or wrong either way, but just a simple fact.
4. I personally wouldn't do CRNA school just for the money, and that is from somebody that has only one week of clinical left before they graduate nurse anesthesia school. The responsibility, the schooling, and the sacrifices that most of us make to get through school just aren't worth the money.
5. There are very few nurse anesthesia schools that allow for you to work during school. Overall, most nurse anesthesia schools do not allow you to work at all, and just because a school allows for some sort of part-time work doesn't mean you will be able to keep up your grades and goto school.
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